unreal

From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishunrealun‧real /ˌʌnˈrɪəl◂/ ●○○ adjective1[not before noun]STRANGE an experience, situation etc that is unreal seems so strange that you think you must be imagining itIt seemed unreal to be sitting and talking to someone so famous.2REAL/NOT IMAGINARY#not related to real things that happenMany people go into marriage with unreal expectations.3spokenEXCITED very exciting syn excellentOur trip to Disneyland was unreal. —unreality /ˌʌnriˈæləti/ noun [uncountable]

Examples from the Corpus

unreal• Battlescenes in the movie seemed entirely unreal.• Our trip to Disneyland was totally unreal.• He was young; it was the sixties; he had a beauty that made him a little unreal.• It made him feel rather strange, rather safe and happy, and as if perhaps all of it were unreal.• The dailycontact with them was unreal.• Pregnancy often seems unreal, and something which will not happen to them.• The music seemed unreal, especially because of my tranny.• In both poems, Leapor attempts to debunkunrealexpectations of marriage.• Self-justifying belongs only to the unreal part of ourselves, the personality.• What we see on the news seems increasingly unreal to me.